PORTO CERVO, ITALY-(2-7-2003) Perfect sailing conditions greeted the 37-boat fleet on the first day of the
Rolex Farr 40 World Championship, which is being sailed in front of Porto
Cervo, Sardinia and organised by the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda this week.
25-knot winds, flat warm water and bright sunshine left nothing but smiling
faces on the 370 crew who stepped ashore after finishing the first two races
late this afternoon. The happiest crew in town being the group that sail on
board Steve Phillips’ Le Renard, the defending world champion who leads the
fleet after the first day’s racing.
With extremely tight action all day today the Farr 40 Class is once again
proving why it is the most competitive large One-Design keelboat around. No
one can question the action. There is always enough close racing to make
even the hardest of sailors come ashore smiling.
Principal Race Officer Peter Reggio was initially forced to delay the first
start for 45 minutes whilst his race committee crew attempted to make the
committee boat anchor hold in the prevailing conditions. The first race saw
the 37 boat fleet sail a 2-mile weather leg to a top mark positioned just
offshore from Capo Ferro, the Costa Smeralda’s famous lighthouse. The
leaders at the first corner came from the right side of the course and it
was John Coumantaros, at the helm of Bambakou, that rounded in front with a
healthy four-boat length lead. By the time the fleet had got to the leeward
gate Coumantaros, assisted by tactician Chris Larson, had opened a 30 second
lead, something that is hard to touch on a stable fresh day like today.
The fresh conditions saw broaches, loss of control in gybes, spinnaker
blowouts and even missed approaches at the laylines. On board each boat the
nine crew, supporting their helmsmen, felt warm seawater, fresh breeze and
the close contact of another 30 boats at all times.
The next two boats back were Crocodile Rock and Struntje Light, both
managing to stay out in front of the pack and the latter not quite managing
to pass Crocodile Rock in a late, high speed charge to the finish. But then
came the pack, who at every mark rounding saw a different set of pretenders,
surging forwards, dropping back, making boathandling mistakes, exploiting
opportunities to give the order of the next 34 places. The skipper who
extracted himself from this the best and finally finishing in fourth place
was Phillips, steering Le Renard.
The second race got underway shortly after 1400 hours and saw the fleet
spread evenly along the long start line. Jim Richardson’s dark blue Barking
Mad made the best exit from the blocks at the committee boat end. Just to
weather and slightly behind was the morning’s winner Bambakou. This pair set
the pace for the first lap of the course, with Coumantaros making all the
running, demonstrating enough extra boatspeed to draw level by the second
weather mark. A slight boathandling error by the Bamabakou crew meant that
what was planned as a close port tack dip astern of Barking Mad ended up
with a stalled rudder and an emergency tack to leeward of the leader. Having
committed a foul in the process, Bambakou exonerated herself with a
360-degree penalty turn. At this level of competition that kind of mistake
costs places and five boats sailed past.
One of the boats to slip through and eventually pass the leader too, was
Massimo Mezzaroma’s Nerone who added a win to a 13th place in the first
race. Another was Phillips’ ever present Le Renard, finishing third to post
the best results of the day.
The fleet tonight is full of stories of what turned out to be a brilliant
start for some and what might have been for others. The warning signal for
the first of three scheduled races tomorrow will be given at 11:30. The
weather is expected to give more moderate sailing conditions.
Rolex Farr 40 World Championship - Provisional Results after two races
Pos. Yacht Owner Tactician R1,R2/TP
1 Le Renard Steve Phillips Kevin Hall 4,3/7
2 Bambakou John Coumantaros Chris Larson 1,7/8
3 Nerone Massimo Mezzaroma Vasco Vascotto 13,1/14
4 Warlord VII Phlip Tolhurst Chris Main 10,4/14
5 GBR-25 Mark Heeley Iain Percy 9,6/15
6 Seven Alberto Signorini Tommasso Chieffi 8,11/19
7 Struntje Light Wolfgang Schaefer Michael Coxon 3,19/22
8 Warpath Steve & Fred Howe John Cutler 14,8/22
9 Game On Oswald/Bainbridge Anthony Haines 11,12/23
10 Barking Mad Jim Richardson Terry Hutchinson 22,2/24
Rolex Farr 40 World Championship Day One
Quotes:
“I’d have to put the reason for our success today down to the fact that we
spent more than 40 minutes sailing around upwind on the race course area
before anyone else left the dock this morning. We really managed to settle
in and understand the conditions. We had speed and the crew never once let
me down with boat handling.“ Steve Phillips, owner/skipper of Le Renard,
defending world champion and overall leader after two races.
“We had a good first race finishing 6th. But in the second race, in spite of
a great start we just seemed to fall back into the pack all the time. Must
have been a speed problem. But on a day like today how can you complain,
this is the best place in the world to sail, its impossible to beat.“ Tony
deMulder, owner/skipper of Victric 5, 20th overall.
“In the first race we had a great start and that coupled with good speed and
tactics got us to the first mark first. Believe it or not after that it is
pretty straight forward in this fleet to stay ahead when you have a buffer.
This afternoon was initially a similar scenario, we started well and were in
second place catching Barking Mad. At the second top mark we were ducking
them on port, the rudder stalled out and we tacked and fouled them. We did a
penalty turn and lost five places in the process.“ John Coumantaros,
owner/skipper of Bambakou, 2nd overall.
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